Cold War Cinema podcast

S2 Ep. 7: Poet (Boris Barnet, 1956)

10/27/2025
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This week on Cold War Cinema, we look at Boris Barnet's Poet (sometimes refered to as The Poet), a 1956 feature about the role of art and literature in war and revolution.

Join hosts Jason Christian, Tony Ballas, and Paul T. Klein for a broad-ranging conversation about the film and the politics of form and style. Throughout, we consider:

  • The challenges of context-dependent domestic filmmaking and international spectatorship

  • How film narrative and aesthetic modes like Socialist Realism participate in the construction of national myths, imaginaries, and ideologies

  • Barnet's dynamic use of framing, blocking, color, and light to advance Poet's plot and politics

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We love to give book or film recommendations on the podcast, so here are ours for this episode:

Paul recommends A History of Russian Cinema by Birgit Beumers.

Tony recommends, The Common Wind: Afro-American Currents in the Age of Haitian Revolution by Julius S. Scott. Tony emphatically does not recommend Literature and Revolution by Leon Trotsky.

Jason recommends Miklós Jansc�'s 1967 Hungarian war film, The Red and the White.

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For more from your hosts:

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Logo by Jason Christian

Theme music by DYAD (Charles Ballas and Jeremy Averitt).

Happy listening!



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